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Abstract
In 1990, the government of India issued a national guideline to all states to
adopt Joint Forest Management (JFM) to achieve better resource
conservation through partnerships between Forest Department (FD) and
Forest Protection Committee (FPC)s which consists of local villagers. While
JFM has also been viewed as a means to improve the livelihood of the forest
dependent, several uncertainties and questions remain. First, it is not clear
how such institutionally defined FPC can gain from JFM. Secondly, it is not
clear whether FPC are in effect facilitating equitable distribution of benefits
from forest related activities. Finally it is not clear what consequences the
process of formalizing local institutional units and defining their forest
boundaries may have at the local level benefit destribution from forests.
This paper thus aims to further understanding of “who gains and who loses
from JFM” based on an empirical investigation of two case study areas from
the Khammam and Medak districts of the Andhra Pradesh state, India. The
paper firstly analyzes local level processes involved in JFM and changes in
the way in which concerned local actors access to direct and indirect
benefits derived from forest related activities.